Example sentences of "have [art] [adj] [noun pl] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ IBM will say it has the same API everywhere , and that users can retain code ’ , he says , ‘ But it 's not promising that it will work unchanged ’ . |
2 | Shetland has no biting insects apart from a few midges in late summer , and I had n't realised just how much of a problem these Arctic mosquitoes could be . |
3 | For Shirley , who has battle with asthma on a daily basis , the genetic research has no direct bearings yet , but for her children 's children , it could make better treatment , perhaps even a cure , a reality . |
4 | Apart from the difficulty of chambers , the ordinary person who has no special connections normally finds it easier to get some kind of start on the common law side , where there is a great deal of small work , in county courts and the criminal courts ; on the Chancery side there is no criminal work and all the civil work tends to be fairly important . |
5 | In general , if is basic in a subsidiary tableau and its row has no positive entries apart from a positive entry in the resource column , then there is no feasible solution with . |
6 | So I would agree with what Tom said on the sort of , things , yeah , you know , knock that together , we 've got that on one piece of paper already that 's about two years out of date , well , was up to date two years ago , which I could probably dig out for you , and then erm we 've got , we can even do it from a European sort of view point , which just has a few things there that need taking up . |
7 | She 'd a hundred times rather change last night 's husband on a daily basis , be reviled as a witch in the parliament of women , she 'd like to have dead babies in succession — she winced at this , ‘ Please , no ’ — but pressed on rather than be that nothing , that unbeing , that sump of ribaldry and pity and contempt , the woman-who-had-never-had-a man , the zitella , the old maid . |
8 | Although Britain had long had trading connections with these areas , hitherto she had had no territorial ambitions there . |
9 | The footings and parts of the walls of around 300 chambers have survived on the ground floor ; the presence of several staircases implies the existence of upper storeys and , taking into account the destroyed upper floors as well , the original temple may have had a thousand chambers altogether . |
10 | Jessica probably knew ten times more about these things than she did , she 'd had a million times more experience , at any rate . |
11 | She did literally now , ever since that turn she 'd had a few months ago ; frightened of the stairs , the climb when the lifts did n't work , she rarely went out , but stayed surrounded and walled-in by belongings , old letters , cards , souvenirs scattered over the furniture . |
12 | ‘ We 've had a few jobs recently where husbands have given their wives surprise parties in the stables or somewhere . |
13 | So we 've got , I did have the first names somewhere . |
14 | And I lost all my urge to go to church , because I felt I was doing wrong , so I did n't go , and then I did n't have the strong principles anymore . |
15 | My shorthand does n't have the right symbols somehow . |
16 | we did n't have the yellow booklets so |
17 | One problem that remains is to explain the recurring dream — if the stimulation from the hindbrain pontine structures is truly random , how is it that people can have the same dreams repeatedly ? |
18 | Go about things in the right way and you wo n't have the same worries again . |
19 | We do n't have the full details yet , but it looks as though we 'll have the status quo for the next 3 years . |
20 | Among some people who have been involved in negotiations at Geneva on laws-of-war matters there is a genuine concern that any neat set of rules limiting the use of nuclear weapons in one way or another might have the unfortunate effects either of weakening deterrence ; or else , contrariwise , of seeming to legitimise such uses of nuclear weapons as are not covered in any agreement ; or else of being nothing more than a paper accord , which would be of little real value in a conflict . |
21 | The joint reading of the greens may be the second-most important function , but having the correct yardages definitely comes first . |
22 | Poverty , he defined as ‘ having no surplus ’ , i.e. having the bare essentials much of the time , but nothing to spare to provide for a crisis such as unemployment , sickness or death in the family . |
23 | They 're worried that having the two groups together is a recipe for trouble , and goes against the Government 's own policy . |
24 | Discounting the cost at present value , to give a more realistic estimate of the loss at the time decisions are made , emphasizes the importance of deferring births : earlier childbearing leads to a loss of £84,000 ; having the two children later loses £62,000 ( quite apart from the career implications ) . |
25 | Buildings must have no sharp edges etc. which might cause injury . |
26 | The faunas and/or floras of these two formations are likely to be different for purely ecological or preservational reasons ( in fact the lower formation in this case , having been metamorphosed , will presumably have no recognisable fossils anyway ) . |
27 | I 'll have no foul mouths here . |
28 | " What do we use in our lives now which people did n't have a hundred years ago ? " |
29 | ‘ I will have a few casts here , Blair , then follow you down to the next pool , ’ I suggested . |
30 | Later on they might have a few minutes together and he would hold her and she would become herself again . |